Friday, September 09, 2005

Where to Point the Fingers

Charles Krauthammer wrote in WaPo reported .... Let's be clear. The author of this calamity was, first and foremost, Nature (or if you prefer, Nature's God). The suffering was augmented, aided and abetted in descending order of culpability by the following:

1. The mayor of New Orleans. He knows the city. He knows the danger. He knows that during Hurricane Georges in 1998, the use of the Superdome was a disaster and fully two-thirds of residents never got out of the city. Nothing was done. He declared a mandatory evacuation only 24 hours before Hurricane Katrina hit. He did not even declare a voluntary evacuation until the day before that, at 5 p.m. At that time, he explained that he needed to study his legal authority to call a mandatory evacuation and was hesitating to do so lest the city be sued by hotels and other businesses.

He also did not make use of the 600 buses at his disposal.
2. The governor. It's her job to call up the National Guard and get it to where it has to go. Where the Guard was in the first few days is a mystery. Indeed, she issued an authorization for the National Guard to commandeer school buses to evacuate people on Wednesday afternoon -- more than two days after the hurricane hit and after much of the fleet had already drowned in its parking lots.
Her state agency, in conjunction with the mayor, did block the Red Cross from sending in food and water, because they thought that if people had food and water they would not be willing to evacuate. She also did not activate reciprocal relations with National Guards in other states, or sign the necessary paperwork to allow the President to Federalize the National Guard and send them in, together with some active duty military.
3. The head of FEMA. Late, slow and in way over his head. On Thursday, Sept. 2, he said on national television that he didn't even know there were people in the convention center, when anybody watching television could see them there, destitute and desperate. Maybe in his vast bureaucracy he can assign three 20-year-olds to watch cable news and give him updates every hour on what in hell is going on.
Had the Governor signed the necessary papers to authorize him to send in help?
4. The president. Late, slow, and simply out of tune with the urgency and magnitude of the disaster.
I disagree. He declared a disaster area even before the hurricane hit
The second he heard that the levees had been breached in New Orleans, he should have canceled his schedule and addressed the country on national television to mobilize it both emotionally and physically to assist in the disaster. His flyover on the way to Washington was the worst possible symbolism. And his Friday visit was so tone-deaf and politically disastrous that he had to fly back three days later.

5. Congress. Now as always playing holier-than-thou. Perhaps it might ask itself who created the Department of Homeland Security in the first place. The congressional response to all crises is the same -- rearrange the bureaucratic boxes, but be sure to add one extra layer. The past four years of DHS have been spent principally on bureaucratic reorganization (and real estate) instead of, say, a workable plan for as predictable a disaster as a Gulf Coast hurricane.
And spending money on special pork projects rather than were it was needed
6. The American people. They have made it impossible for any politician to make any responsible energy policy over the past 30 years -- but that is a column for another day. Now is not the time for constructive suggestions. Now is the time for blame, recrimination and sheer astonishment. Mayor Ray Nagin has announced that, as bodies are still being found and as a public health catastrophe descends upon the city, he is sending 60 percent of his cops on city funds for a little R&R, mostly to Vegas hotels. Asked if it was appropriate to party in these circumstances, he responded: "New Orleans is a party town. Get over it."

Greg Ransom blogged It turns out some of the clearer thinking folks at the Pentagon and in the Justice Dept. were urging the President to do just what I’ve been saying he should have done– seize control of the police power and Katrina rescue mission in New Orleans. And there is more evidence that the Governor of Louisiana should be impeached. She now admits herself that she doesn’t know the high school basics of the American Federal system:
“I need everything you have got,” Ms. Blanco said she told Mr. Bush last Monday, after the storm hit. In an interview, she acknowledged that she did not specify what sorts of soldiers. “Nobody told me that I had to request that,” Ms. Blanco said.
And reports everywhere establish that Blanco refused to grant the President the powers over the National Guard that he had requested, and that Blanco waited days before deciding many of these questions.


Betsy Newmark blogged Read the rest. He doesn't spare anyone.

MarkInMexico blogged I guess that pretty much says it all.

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